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elleng

(136,095 posts)
Tue May 9, 2023, 11:41 PM May 2023

Otherwise known as the Golden Spike Ceremony, this historic event

not only celebrates the completion of the first transcontinental railroad, named the Pacific Railroad, but it also recognizes the significance of the immigrant workforce that helped the nation accomplish what many believed was impossible.

Took place May 10, 1869, was held at Promontory Summit, Utah Territory.

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Otherwise known as the Golden Spike Ceremony, this historic event (Original Post) elleng May 2023 OP
A Truly Epical Event The Roux Comes First May 2023 #1
That's all fine and dandy but, there's something you left out. werdna May 2023 #2

The Roux Comes First

(1,567 posts)
1. A Truly Epical Event
Wed May 10, 2023, 12:13 AM
May 2023

In ever so many ways.

But my on-the-other-hand side wants to know about when/how even vaguely comparable rail routes were installed in the rest of the spaces humans occupy.

It can't always be just about us.

werdna

(930 posts)
2. That's all fine and dandy but, there's something you left out.
Wed May 10, 2023, 06:55 AM
May 2023

The immigrant workers you mentioned were treated as less than human and many had been abducted and forced to work against their will by cruel overseers. The whole construction was a competition between two heartless corporations to see which would lay more track than the other, at any cost. Treaties were repeatedly broken with the indigenous peoples of this continent to facilitate land grabs for the route, burning and murdering entire villages and peoples. This endeavour was also responsible for initiating the great buffalo kill off,leaving tribes without their main source of food and raw materials for clothing, tools and other necessary articles for day to day life. The construction of this railroad lead to a population surge in areas long ceded to indigenous peoples. Towns, ranches, miles long fencing began even before the lines completion.

So, yes, let's celebrate this momentous occasion!

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